“…Due to the influence of thick sedimentary layers atop the crust in the Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains, it is difficult to reliably image crustal and upper‐mantle structure using RF analysis or surface wave tomography alone, leading to occasionally conflicting crustal thickness and lithospheric velocity measurements. Additionally, many of the recent studies on crustal and upper mantle properties either target the entire contiguous United States (e.g., Buehler & Shearer, 2017; Liu & Shearer, 2021; Ma & Lowry, 2017; Shen & Ritzwoller, 2016; Yuan et al., 2014), or along densely spaced profiles (e.g., Hopper et al., 2016; Li et al., 2020; MacDougall et al., 2015; Parker et al., 2013; Verellen et al., 2020). There are only a limited number of post‐USArray studies on crustal and mantle structure focusing on the SEUS (e.g., Biryol et al., 2016; Hopper et al., 2017; Wagner et al., 2018), among which none has used the RF and Rayleigh wave dispersion joint inversion technique that this study employs.…”